Sunday, April 21, 2013

E-Book Details:


Title:
Principles of network and system administration
Publisher:
Wiley, 2004
Author:
Mark Burgess
Edition:
2nd, illustrated 2000
Format:
PDF
ISBN:
0470868074
EAN:
9780470868072
No.ofPages:
634
Book Description:
Burgess approaches both network and system administration from the perspective of principles and ideas which do not change on a day-to-day basis.
                                             A great deal of attention is paid to the heuristics of system and network administration; technical and sociological issues are taken into account equally and are presented thoughtfully with an eye to teaching not what to do as a system or network administrator, but how to think about problems that arise in practice. As a result, the author keeps the reader looking forward to what comes next and how to implement what he or she has learned.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
MARK BURGESS is associate professor at Oslo University College, Norway, and a member of SAGE, USENIX and the IEEE. He is an internationally respected scientist both in Computer Science and the Theoretical Physics and has won various prizes for his work on Computer Immunology and GNU cfengine. He was recently awarded The SAGE 2003 Professional Contribution Award, "For groundbreaking work in systems administration theory and individual contributions to the field".
FEATURES:
  • A single, comprehensive resource that responds to the high demand for specialists who can provide advice to users and handle day-to-day administration, maintenance, and support of computer systems and networks
  • Author approaches both network and system administration from the perspective of the principles that do not change on a day-to-day basis
  • Shows how to discover customer needs and then use that information to identify, interpret, and evaluate system and network requirements
  • New coverage includes Java services and Ipv6
Table of Contents:
Preface to Second Edition.
1. Introduction.
2. System Components.
3. Networked Communities.
4. Host Management.
5. User Management
6. Models of Network and System Administration.
7. Configuration and Maintenance.
8. Diagnostics, Fault and Change Management.
9. Application Level Services.
10. Network Level Services.
11. Principles of Security.
12. Security Implications.
13. Analytical System Administration.
14. Summary and Outlook.
A. Some Useful Unix Commands.
B. Programming and Compiling.
C. Example Telnet Session.
D. Glossary.
E. Recommended Reading.
Bibliography.
Index.

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